Field Weld Symbol
How to read the Bandeira de soldagem de campo — placement at the arrow junction, shop vs Soldagem de campo distinction, and D1.1:2025 field Soldagem Requisitos.
Shop Weld vs Field Weld
In Aço estrutural construction, members are fabricated in the shop (factory) and then assembled at the erection site (field). The field weld flag on a drawing tells the Soldador and Inspetor that this particular joint is to be welded on-site, not during shop Fabricação.
Why the Distinction Matters
Shop welds are made under controlled conditions — overhead cranes for positioning, consistent Temperatura, wind protection, and full equipment access. Quality control is typically more streamlined.
Field welds face additional challenges: weather exposure (wind disrupts Gás de proteção coverage), limited access (welding in difficult positions), ambient temperature concerns (Clima Frio affects Pré-aquecimento and interpass temperatures), and inspector access considerations.
Per D1.1:2025, the same quality standards apply to both shop and field welds. The field weld flag does not change Critérios de aceitação — it alerts the erection team and Inspeção personnel that this joint requires field attention.
Field Welding Conditions
D1.1:2025 Cláusula 7 governs fabrication requirements including field welding conditions. Field welds must satisfy the same procedural requirements as shop welds, with additional environmental considerations.
| Requirement | Detail | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Min temperature | 0°F [−20°C] ambient — welding not permitted below this | Clause 7.11.2 |
| Wind protection | GMAW, GTAW, EGW, FCAW-G require shelter reducing wind to max 5 mph [8 km/h] at the weld | Clause 7.11.1 |
| Preheat | Same Tabela 5.11 requirements — ambient cold may require higher preheat to compensate | Clause 5 |
| Acceptance criteria | Same as shop welds — Visual and NDE Aceitação criteria both in Clause 8 | Clause 8 |
Field welds face more variables than shop welds — wind, temperature, fit-up tolerances, and limited access. That is why field welding typically requires the inspector who verifies Código compliance to be present during critical operations, not just for final acceptance.